与垃圾堆的相互作用与核心肠道微生物群在工蚁Aphaenogaster picea的共同发生有关。

Access microbiology Pub Date : 2025-01-30 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1099/acmi.0.000832.v4
Alison Pagalilauan, Christina Pavloudi, Santiago Meneses Ospina, Adam Smith, Jimmy H Saw
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引用次数: 0

摘要

比较群居昆虫群落之间和内部肠道微生物群的多样性可以说明细菌群落组成和宿主行为之间的相互作用。在许多群居昆虫物种中,不同的工蜂表现出不同的任务行为。不同工人类型中核心微生物群组成差异的证据可能表明微生物与工人之间的劳动分工有关。在这里,我们介绍了具有不同任务行为的隐腹蚁工人的核心微生物群。该属是丰富的世界范围内,但相关的微生物群这一组是未研究。本研究的云杉无囊菌肠道样品细菌群落包括19门,以变形菌门、蓝藻门和厚壁菌门为主。16S rRNA基因序列分析显示,在与垃圾堆积物相互作用较多的工人中,云杉芽孢杆菌肠道细菌群落具有明显的相似性聚类。虽然护理蚁和觅食蚁的肠道细菌群落在总体组成和结构上相似,但工蚁群体在优势类群的相对丰度上存在差异。与垃圾堆有更多相互作用的蚂蚁肠道细菌群落以与虫浆科相关的扩增子序列变异为主。通过垃圾堆与粪便物质的相互作用似乎对微生物类群分布有最大的影响,这种影响似乎与工人类型无关。本文首次报道了隐腹蚁肠道微生物群落组成。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Interaction with refuse piles is associated with co-occurrence of core gut microbiota in workers of the ant Aphaenogaster picea.

Comparing the diversity of gut microbiota between and within social insect colonies can illustrate interactions between bacterial community composition and host behaviour. In many eusocial insect species, different workers exhibit different task behaviours. Evidence of compositional differences between core microbiota in different worker types could suggest a microbial association with the division of labour among workers. Here, we present the core microbiota of Aphaenogaster picea ant workers with different task behaviours. The genus Aphaenogaster is abundant worldwide, yet the associated microbiota of this group is unstudied. Bacterial communities from Aphaenogaster picea gut samples in this study consist of 19 phyla, dominated by Proteobacteria, Cyanobacteria and Firmicutes. Analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences reveals distinct similarity clustering of Aphaenogaster picea gut bacterial communities in workers that have more interactions with the refuse piles. Though gut bacterial communities of nurse and foraging ants are similar in overall composition and structure, the worker groups differ in relative abundances of dominant taxa. Gut bacterial communities from ants that have more interactions with refuse piles are dominated by amplicon sequence variants associated with Entomoplasmataceae. Interaction with faecal matter via refuse piles seems to have the greatest impact on microbial taxa distribution, and this effect appears to be independent of worker type. This is the first report surveying the gut microbiome community composition of Aphaenogaster ants.

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